Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Silver Stock Report: Wall Street Journal Aids Silver Price Suppression

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Wall Street Journal Aids Silver Price Suppression

(Through misinformation, lies and omission!  Plus, the year in review, and price predictions for 2011)

Silver Stock Report

by Jason Hommel, December 29th, 2010


I'm called upon by my regular readers to refute, rebut, and rebuke this bad article on silver from the Wall Street Journal.

Price of Silver Soaring
Investor-Fueled 74% Gains Dwarf Gold; Race to Open Mines
By CAROLYN CUI And ROBERT GUY MATTHEWS
DECEMBER 26, 2010

Regarding (RE) the WSJ comment:  "unexpected surge in investor demand."

Really?  Unexpected, you say?  But precious metals bulls have been predicting explosions in the price for ten years based on irrefutable fundamentals and unsustainable market manipulation!

How can investor demand be unexpected when the price of precious metals has been going up continuously for ten years now since the year 2000?  Don't investors like to buy things that are rising in price?  Don't investors also try to predict things that will rise in price, and buy them before they really rise?  Does the WSJ know anything at all about investing?

Unexpected? Really?  When the numbers of silver Eagle 1 oz. coins produced by the US Mint has been increasing steadily for the past 3-4 years, up from 10 million oz. to nearly 40  million oz. this year?  How can a single year's investor demand be unexpected, when its increase is already a steady trend?

Regarding the WSJ comment:  "Prices are rising despite oversupply."

What oversupply?  What do you even mean by oversupply?

Here is the dictionary definition of oversupply:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/oversupply
"A supply in excess of what is appropriate or required."

Ah, the WSJ is no longer reporting fact, but throwing out opinion now.

There is no oversupply, and can never be any oversupply of things such as gold and silver, since they have the least diminishing marginal utility of all things on earth, since they are money.  Nobody ever complained that they had too much money. 

But what does the WSJ mean by oversupply?

The supply & demand numbers produced by such surveys as http://www.silverinstitute.org/ who the WSJ quotes as a source, have "sum up" categories called "Implied Net Disinvestment" and "Implied Net Investment". 

http://www.silverinstitute.org/supply_demand.php

When investors are buying, this is often called a surplus, or as the WSJ says, an "oversupply", and when investors are selling, that is called a deficit.

So, apparently, the WSJ is saying that when investors are buying silver that's "oversupply".  And thus, when they describe that action as an "oversupply", they are really saying that silver purchases by investors are "inappropriate".  Thus, they reveal their bias, with one word.

RE:  "Many analysts expected those factors would keep a lid on prices in 2010."

But most silver analysts are employed by LBMA bullion banks who have a vested interest in manipulating silver prices downward, since silver is the Achilles heel, or arch enemy, of the banking system.  Thus, "mainstream" silver analysts have never gotten a single year's prediction correct in the last ten years of the bull market in silver and gold.  They always "predict" prices for next year that are within about 5% of current prices, and never any higher.  Meanwhile, silver prices have risen from $4.15/oz. in 2003 to $30.60 now in 2010, which is a cumulative return of 637%, which, over 7 years, is an average annual gain of 33%.  They never come close to predicting such gains.

Check my math, here:
http://www.smartmoney.com/compoundcalc/

Have any of the mainstream analysts predicted a silver price gain of 33%, for the following year, or even close, in the last 7 years?  Never. Thus, they are worse than useless, they are purposefully deceiving, or willfully ignorant, as is this WSJ article.  That should be no surprise, and neither should silver's price rise.

RE:  "What they didn't expect was an overwhelming flow of money into the market from investors eager to ride a commodities rally."

Overwhelming flow of money into silver?  Really?  Let's see, there is $14,000 billion to $18,000 billion of paper dollars in the US banking system, which does not count dollars in overseas banks, and the rest of the world is printing up paper money like crazy for competitive devaluations.  Meanwhile, the US government has an annual deficit of $1500 billion or more, depending on how you count, if you count off budget items, it could be as high as $3000 billion depending on who you read.  Meanwhile, a tiny $3 billion pours into silver, which is a paltry 2% of 1% of the money in the US banking system, and a mere 10% of 1% (or 1/1000th) of new US money creation. 

I wouldn't call that an overwhelming flow of money into silver.  I'd say that's only a tiny trickle, wouldn't you say?

RE: "This is a story almost entirely about investment," says Stephen Briggs, senior metals strategist at BNP Paribas.

Well, the silver story, in the future, will be almost entirely about investment, but today, investors are still buying only a tiny fraction of new silver mine supply, with the rest being consumed by industrial applications of all sorts, from fabrication, to photography, to jewelry, silverware, and coins and medals. 

From the silverinstitute.org: 

2009 mine production: 709.6 million oz.
2009 Implied Net Investment: 136.9 million oz. (oversupply, or investor buying)

But let's pause here, and examine the numbers more closely. 

Sprott wrote an excellent silver report that reveals that ETF silver demand is not counted in the "demand" numbers for silver!!!
http://www.industrymailout.com/Industry/View.aspx?id=245442&q=264546678qz%3D3f9465

Fraudulent supply/demand numbers, omitting investor demand, or calling it a "surplus", is part of the manipulation of silver prices.

But this implies a few other things, too. 

Either the exchange traded funds are not actually going out into the market to buy silver which means they are mostly all fraudulent, or, their net purchases are more than offset by investors or refiners dumping 1000 oz. silver bars (the only acceptable form of ETF silver) to dealers who sell it directly to LBMA banks.   We've never had to dump any silver bars in the last 2 years of our precious metals business.

RE:  Investors from the U.S. to China turned to "hard" assets such as copper and other commodities in part as a hedge against inflation worries.

No, copper has never been a key inflation hedge.  Gold and silver are.  In fact, recent reports show that JP Morgan has been buying all the world's warehouse copper, up to 90% of it.  So, JP Morgan owns the copper, not investors, so this statement is just a bald faced lie. 

RE:  Exchange-traded funds backed with silver have enabled investors to invest in a market that traditionally was harder to participate in.

I don't know what's so hard about buying $15,000 worth of silver at $30/oz.  It's only 500 troy ounces, which only weighs 35 pounds, and comes in a box the size of 9 inches by 9 inches by 3 inches high.  Even 60 year old ladies carry such boxes out of our store all the time.  That's one of the world's easiest commodities to buy.  Contrast with WSJ's beloved copper, at $4.40/pound, which means $15,000 of it would weigh a staggering 3409 pounds!  That's why copper is not remotely a viable inflation hedge, and has never been used as commodity money, but only as token money.  Even 1 troy oz. of copper, at $4.40/oz. divided by 14.8 troy oz/pound is only worth 29 cents per troy oz., but would cost you about $4 each for minting costs and distribution, and perhaps $5-10 each for widespread marketing via MLM plans.

RE:  In recent months, concerns about inflation, the European debt crisis and the U.S. Federal Reserve's recent moves to boost the economy have driven investors to hard assets, also benefiting silver prices.

Really?  I agree.  But then, why was silver's move so "unexpected" as the WSJ first wrote, to most analysts?  Shouldn't this have been easily foreseen?

RE:  The craze has reached the coin market.

Craze?  Craze you say?  What do you mean, craze?

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/craze
1. A short-lived popular fashion; a fad.
2. A fine crack in a surface or glaze.

Ah, only two definitions for the noun form.  Clearly, they don't mean the second.  Ah, they imply silver demand by investors is not only inappropriate, but will be short lived, and that it's now popular.

Wait, when only 1/1000th of new money is moving into silver, why and how is that popular?  When only 2% of 1% of actual money in the banks, or, less than $2 out of every $10,000 sitting in banks is being invested into silver, how can that be accurately described as popular?  No, silver is very unpopular now, still.

Let's be honest.  If even 1% of paper money in US only banks, were to be invested into silver, it would be 50 times greater than the investment demand today, which would be as much as $180 billion dollars, moving into the silver market that only produces 700 million new oz. by the mines each year.  $180 billion divided by 700 million implies no silver buying from anywhere else in the entire world, and no silver buying from any kind of industrial application, which implies a lowest possible price of $257/oz., at this "1% demand" level, which would still be, long, long before silver ever gets to be "popular". 

That's a shamefully inaccurate description, calling silver coin buying a "craze", which also implies things such as:

verb: 1. To cause to become mentally deranged or obsessed; make insane.
verb, intr.  1. To become mentally deranged or obsessed; go insane.

The reason why that word "craze" is particularly objectionable to me is that silver buyers are returning to rational thought.  People who think used, dirty, printed paper is valuable are the ones who have lost their minds.

RE:  "Silver's reliance on investors to prop up the price could cause it to tumble suddenly."

"Silver's reliance on investors"? No, Investors rely on silver!

But seriously, I agree, silver's price is increasingly reliant upon investors who sell paper money for silver, and at some point that will ultimately halt completely.   For example, after silver hits $1 million per ounce, the price could suddenly tumble to either $900,000 per oz., or it could simply stop trading in terms of paper money altogether, as paper money might just not buy anything at all at some point.  It is far more true to say that paper money's value relies more on confidence than silver.

But really, the main point with silver is that today's value is certainly not dependent on investors, but rather, industrial demand, which is far larger, and more stable.  As China alone continues to develop and surpass the total consumption level of Western nations, their population will consume silver as does the western world.  That would be 6 tenths of an oz. of silver, per year, per person, because silver is an essential part of switches in electronic devices.  If China consumed that much silver, times 1.3 billion people, that's 780 million ounces, which is more silver than is currently produced annually by all silver mines in the world.  If the world is going to ever run out of things like cheap oil, or copper, it will certainly run out of cheap silver, first.

RE:  "He forecasts an average price of $30.10 per troy ounce next year "

Yes, the analysts never predict a price 33% greater, which, as I calculated above, is the average annual gain in silver so far in this bull market.  Next year's "average" is always today's price, and always paired with a warning about silver moving down.  In less than two days, next year's average price was exceeded this year!

RE:  "But he cautions, "The number is only going to be achievable as long as fresh money keeps moving in."

And why wouldn't it?  We know that the USA alone will print from $3000 billion to $4000 billion next year.  So why wouldn't at least $4.5 billion move into silver next year?  Perhaps it's more likely that $400 billion will move into silver next year, and silver's price will be $1000/oz.?  Well, maybe not, but a more conservative estimate might be about $10-20 billion, which could drive silver to $50-100/oz., as that's how this trend is developing.

RE:  "Silver's all-time high was set in January 1980 at $48.70 an ounce, or $129.32 when adjusted for inflation."

Perhaps the worst lies of all.  What do they mean by "inflation"?  The CPI index that does not count food, fuel, housing, tuition, or medical expenses?  What does CPI count these days?  What's left?  Imported clothing, goods made in China, and computers? 

Instead, if we count inflation as the monetary base, as M3, which is no longer published, we might observe that M3 was $1.8 trillion in 1980, and nearly $18 trillion today, an increase of ten times as much, thus, the true inflation adjusted high is not $129.32/oz., but rather $500/oz.!!!

See, another part of the lie is the false specificity of that .32 at the end of their $129.32, to make it sound so official and supremely accurate, but it's not remotely accurate. 

And neither is my estimate of $500/oz.  That's a low ball figure.  Is money M3?  What is M3?  M3 included short term bonds.  Well most of the bond market is now all "short term" bonds, given that they stopped selling the 30 year bond, and given that interest rates are all so low, all bonds are priced at the near equivalent of actual dollars.  And the bond market is far larger than the $18 trillion estimate of M3.  The bond market could be $25 trillion to $35 trillion, who knows?  Data on that is hard to find. 

Much of the bond market is as fraudulent as the paper promises in the silver market.  A lot of people don't buy bonds anymore, they just place bets on the direction of interest rates, by buying futures on bonds, or options on bonds, which is an even more fixed and rigged game than the silver price. 

Which brings us to derivatives, the bets on bonds, called "interest rate derivatives", which are estimated to be as high as $400 trillion or more.

If that is money, then the inflation that has taken place since 1980 is just off the charts, and will ultimately drive silver prices to far higher than $500/oz.

RE:  "This year investors are expected to pile a record $4.5 billion into the silver market, accounting for 24% of the world's total demand, says GFMS Ltd., a metals consulting firm in London. That's the highest level, in dollar terms, in decades. Silver's relatively small market size�$19 billion compared with $170 billion for gold�has also played a role in amplifying the impact of investors, according to GFMS."

Silver's price is moving so fast, it was up nearly $1/oz. in the few days since this WSJ article.  Silver's market size, at 700 million oz., times $30/oz., is already $21 billion, not $19 billion, but this is a tiny quibble of a fact. 

The point is that $20 billion, or even $4.5 billion, in a world where $3000 billion of new money is being printed annually by the USA alone, and perhaps as high as $8000 billion worldwide, is really, really, really small, even if it's a record number.  But the WSJ article never makes comparisons like this, it just warns that $4.5 billion is a lot, "the highest level in decades", and the word billion is a lot, in terms of real things, but it's not a lot in terms of dollars, which are not real things. 

RE:  "The strength in silver prices has prompted a flurry of development around the globe and pushed anticipated production in 2010 to 733.2 million ounces, up 3.3% from 2009 levels, and up 14% since 2006."

Ah, did you think they said that new silver mine supply will increase 3.3%?  No, that's anticipated production.  It may be less!  They write as if this 3.3% increase is a lot and will act to reduce prices. However, new paper money in the USA alone is about 3 Trillion / 15 Trillion, or 20%!  And world population growth is about 1.1%.

RE:  "The market is set to see a surplus of 64.4 million ounces in 2010, says Barclays Capital, which could curb prices."

Wait, wait, wait.  Silverinstitute.org says the 2009 "surplus" is 137 million oz. of implied net investment, while Barclays says the 2010 surplus will be 64.4 million oz.?  Ok, if investors were buying 137 million oz. in 2009, and even more in 2010 to explain the current rise, how will 64.4 million be enough to satisfy them, without the price moving up? 

Less silver certainly won't curb prices, unless, by using the word "curb" Barclays is implying a chart formation that looks like a straight line up before leveling off, somewhat like a curb on the side of a road.  But Barclays is not implying that, for sure.

The article notes that a few silver mines will be increasing production.  No mention is made of any mines that will be decreasing production, or closing altogether, which, of course, happens all the time in the mining business.  Mines are depleting assets, and run dry.

That sums up what I needed to refute in the article.

The article makes no mention of any of the following of this year's major news items in silver:

THE YEAR IN REVIEW

1.  No mention of the fact that JP Morgan was sued by at least 25 firms for manipulating the silver market.  (A new lawsuit against JP Morgan on behalf of SLV investors was just filed, two days after the WSJ article).  http://news.silverseek.com/SilverSeek/1293546686.php
2.  No mention of the BIS reports showing that world banks have a net derivatives exposure of $137 billion of "over the counter" "other preciouse metals" liability, which is a short position, mostly in silver.  Links:
http://www.bis.org/statistics/derstats.htm
http://www.bis.org/statistics/otcder/dt21c22a.pdf
3. No mention that the BIS changed their own reports, reducing the number for June, 2009, from $203 billion, down $100 billion, to $93 billion, after the US Justice department said it was investigating JP Morgan for silver manipulation.
4.  No mention that JP Morgan admitted to being short silver, and wanted to placate internet criticism by attempting to cover their silver.
http://silverstockreport.com/2010/jp-morgan-silver-short.html
5.  No mention that the CFTC's Bart Chilton admitted that one large trader had 40% of the silver market at the COMEX.
6.  No mention that the CFTC has been investigating silver manipulation for over two years.
7.  No mention that the CFTC just delayed imposing position limits on silver.
http://silverstockreport.com/2010/cftc-delay.html
8.  No mention of the recent rumor that JP Morgan has two of the CFTC commissioners on their payroll. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uPg4qTNTP-E&sns=fb
9.  No mention of Andrew McGuire's CFTC testimony of a prediction in advance of a JP Morgan silver manipulation.
10.  No mention of Jeff Christion's CFTC admission that the LBMA is leveraged 100 to one with nearly zero actual physical metal backing up most "physical" accounts.
http://www.bullionbullscanada.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10586:jeffrey-christians-1001-blunder&catid=48:gold-commentary&Itemid=131

MY PRICE PREDICTION FOR SILVER:  At least a high of $40/oz. by next year, 33% higher than $30 this year.

If the past seven years is any guide, silver's price should continue at pace, if not outperform, the past seven year's average gains of 33% per year.  Someday, silver could really blow up much faster than that.  Frauds do collapse suddenly.  The dollar is fraud.  Fractional reserve banking is fraud.  Fractional reserve banking in silver is fraud.  Most of the financial world is fraud today.  Silver is not a fraud and is the opposite of fraud. Silver is not a promise to pay, silver in your hand is evidence that you have been paid in full.

=====

But let's assume, for the benefit of the doubt, that Carolyn Cui is just a very bad researcher on silver, and was not intentionally omitting all the major news items on silver in the past year.

How honest is she?  Or the WSJ for that matter?

Here's a WSJ article on silver from May, 2008.

Fundamentals Begin to Weigh On Silver
New Mines' Output, Economic Weakness Could Crimp Prices
By CAROLYN CUI May, 2008.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121098087701600147.html

Ah, not very accurate, and not a very good warning.  The WSJ should have warned that the dollar would fall, and that people could protect their purchasing power by buying silver.  Did they?  Sadly, no.  They have never gotten it right on silver in this entire bull market, and are as woefully wrong today, as they were two years ago. 

Excerpt:  Barclays analyst Suki Cooper, who targets silver's average price at $15.20. "Silver's fundamentals look less compelling this year and are more likely to push prices lower," she wrote in a research note.

Laughable!  Exactly as I predicted, these buffoons always predict "same as last year" prices, and are never bullish.

Excerpt: CPM Group, a New York-based commodities research firm, expects demand for silver to hold up this year, and its price to average $18.25.

=====

I've seen better reports on silver from CAROLYN CUI.  I've even written to her a time or two.  So I can conclude that she is not ignorant, but willfully ignorant, or being misleading on purpose. Perhaps if she does not "toe the line" she will be out of a job, but if your job involves lying, you should probably quit.

So, what should we conclude, and what should we do, in the order of most importance?

1.  Buy silver.  Buy real silver that you have carried, lifted, and stored in your own vault.
2.  Do not trust the Wall Street Journal, or CAROLYN CUI or ROBERT GUY MATTHEWS ever again.
3.  Cancel your subscriptions to the Wall Street Journal.
4.  Write nasty letters to the WSJ's advertisers, and boycott them (just kidding, don't waste your time).
5.  Subscribe to the free newsletter at the Silver Stock Report. 
6.  Share this report in your own blogs online, or on facebook.
7.  Write your own refutations of future mainstream hit pieces on silver, exposing their intentional lies and misinformation, and lack of information. 
8.  Write to Write to Carolyn Cui at carolyn.cui@wsj.com and Robert Guy Matthews at robertguy.matthews@wsj.com and ask them for their honest answers and justifications to the accurate information presented here, just for the fun of watching them squirm.

Til next time, Happy New Year, and we will be open again on Jan. 3rd.

=====

I strongly advise you to take possession of real gold and silver, at anywhere near today's price, while you still can.  The fundamentals indicate rising prices for decades to come.

Our Coin Shops are open 10AM to 5PM Pacific Time, Monday to Friday, closed weekends.

WE ARE CLOSED UNTIL MONDAY, JANUARY 3RD

JH MINT & Coin Shop, Grass Valley, CA -- minimum $5000 order for free shipping, USA shipping only.
Kerri: (530) 273-8822
kerri.jhmint@yahoo.com  
(530) 273-8175
www.jhmint.com

See also my Mom's Silver Shop in Sacramento, CA
www.momssilvershop.com
3510 Auburn Blvd., #12
Sacramento, CA 95821
(916) 481 5656
(Mom will ship with no minimum order size, and overseas, and take credit cards and paypal.)



Sincerely, 

    Jason Hommel 

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    For the Biblical case for the benefits of using honest money, and why we should avoid all futures contracts, see  www.bibleprophesy.org




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    silverstockreport.com | 13241 Grass Valley Ave | Grass Valley | CA | 95945

    Wednesday, December 22, 2010

    Silver Stock Report: Can Cities Legally Buy Silver or Gold?

    God Bless You!
     
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    Can Cities Legally Buy Silver or Gold?

    (Legally, according to the CA code?  What about other States?!)

    Silver Stock Report

    by Jason Hommel, December, 2010


    The precious metals community of advocates may need legal assistance.  Position letters, or even lobbying.  Most of the money in this world, in the USA, sits in government pension plans.  Some of those who direct such plans say they are not legally allowed to buy silver or gold.  Is this true?  Do we need to change the law?  Can they buy certain ETF's?  I need help to be able to answer these questions.

    Please read the following exchange:

    A Precious Metals Advocate writes to a City Manager:

    I have suggested to this council that they take a hard look at precious metals for investing the treasury funds of Culver City. I first asked the council to do this in Dec 2008. Gold was under $800, it currently is approaching $1400. In the CAFR from 2008-2009 the treasury reported a less then 4% return on investments. Not bad but had you invested in gold this return would have been even higher. I must now caution you that the US dollar will be declining severly in purchasing power by Spring 2011. I therefore implore you to protect our community now by diversifying a portion of our cities investments in physical precious metals, not ETF's or other paper promises for silver --

    =====

    A City MPA Assistant Manager responds:

    Good morning,
     
    Thank you for sharing your thoughts on the City’s investment portfolio.
     
    Unlike individuals and private corporations, the City’s investment of the public’s money must comply with very high levels of safety and liquidity.  Through enactment of Sections 53600 et seq. of the [CA] Government Code, the State Legislature provided the types of investments that local governments may make.  The link above provides the text of said Sections of the Government Code.
     
    Gold and other precious metals are not eligible investments under the Government Code.
     
    Have a good Monday.

    ======

    The Precious Metals Advocate asks for my help, and writes:

    Jason my man, been following you for a while ever since I first came across your articles on silverseek.com.
     
    I have been trying to get my local govenment to invest in gold and silver since 2008. Today I finally got a reply from my local government that gave me some insight into why they have stonewalled my inquiries for so long, they claim they can't do it because of the laws regarding investments of monies by municipalities.
     
    Do you know any way that a local government can legally buy physical precious metals?
     
    http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/waisgate?WAISdocID=86620914075+1+0+0&WAISaction=retrieve

    =====

    I respond:

    I read the CA code sections from
    53600 to 53610, the end of the section.

    I never saw any prohibition of investing in gold or silver.

    I did find this, which would support the investment into gold or silver.

    It says:

    http://law.onecle.com/california/government/53600.5.html

    "When investing, reinvesting, purchasing, acquiring, exchanging, selling, or managing public funds, the primary objective of a trustee shall be to safeguard the principal of the funds under its control. The secondary objective shall be to meet the liquidity needs of the depositor. The third objective shall be to achieve a return on the funds under its control."

    Thus, investing in gold or silver would meet all three objectives.

    So, I fail to see the problem.

    All of the rest of the sections provide limits on the types of bonds that a city may invest in. 

    Gold and silver are not bonds, and thus, would be exempt from all of the limits.

    But consult a lawyer.

    Sincerely,

    Jason Hommel

    =====

    Readers, can you help?  I cannot hire lawyers from all 50 states; that's beyond my capacity.  But I can post position letters, if you get such a letter from a lawyer in your own state, and I can host such letters, for further reference at my website, to help enable city managers to invest funds into physical gold or silver. 

    Please help me.  Consult a lawyer.  Advocate precious metals investments to your city.  Let me know the results. 


    =====

    JH MINT & Coin Shop, Grass Valley, CA -- minimum order $5000 for free shipping, USA shipping only.
    Open 10AM to 5PM Pacific Time, Monday to Friday, closed weekends and bank holidays.  (Also Closed from Dec. 25th to Jan 1st)
    www.jhmint.com
    (530) 273-8175

    Kerri handles internet phone orders:
    kerri.jhmint@yaoo.com
    (530) 273-8822


    Sincerely,

      Jason Hommel
      www.silverstockreport.com
      www.bibleprophesy.org


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      Tuesday, December 21, 2010

      Silver Stock Report: CFTC Delays Position Limits

      God Bless You!
       
      You may unsubscribe if you no longer wish to receive our emails.
       Greetings!

      CFTC Delays Position Limits

      (CFTC Mulls Ending the Ponzi Scheme of the Dollar!)

      Silver Stock Report

      by Jason Hommel, December 21st, 2010

      Please click on the following link to read my full article:

      CFTC Delays Position Limits

      Hommel, and the Yahoo Contributor's user agreement both condemn futures contracts, and ponzi schemes.

      Key Excerpts from my article:

      "Futures contracts are, in my own well researched opinion, a form of market manipulation, debt, and slavery, and thus, are totally contrary to all free market principles. It is not "freedom", to be free to enslave another, whether through a chain on someone's neck, or through a contractual obligation that can be enforced by a margin clerk, or ultimately property evictions enforced by a local Sheriff."

      "What's amazing is that according to the  Yahoo  Contributors User Agreement you also can't promote ponzi schemes. I guess  Yahoo  Contributors network will have to ban anyone who promotes the dollar, social security, the us government or banking. I certainly look forward to that day! Not that the  Yahoo  Editors have that much wisdom or discernment, of course. I'm certain that they did not intend to mean that, when they put a ban on ponzi schemes. But perhaps they should. "

      Read the full article:

      CFTC Delays Position Limits

      =====

      Holiday Hours at the JH MINT.

      We will be closed on Dec. 24th, and opening again on Monday, Jan 3rd. 

      =====

      I strongly advise you to take possession of real gold and silver, at anywhere near today's prices, while you still can.   The fundamentals indicate rising prices for decades to come, and a major price spike can happen at any time.

      Follow me on facebook!
      http://www.facebook.com/jason.hommel

      JH MINT & Coin Shop, Grass Valley, CA -- minimum order $5000 for free shipping, USA shipping only.
      Open 10AM to 5PM Pacific Time, Monday to Friday, closed weekends and bank holidays.  (Also Closed from Dec. 25th to Jan 1st)
      www.jhmint.com
      (530) 273-8175
      Kerri handles internet phone orders:
      kerri.jhmint@yaoo.com
      (530) 273-8822

      For smaller orders, or for shipping overseas, see my Mom's Silver Shop in Sacramento, CA
      www.momssilvershop.com
      3510 Auburn Blvd., #12  (Auburn & Watt Ave)
      Sacramento, CA
      (916) 481 5656



      Sincerely,

        Jason Hommel
        www.silverstockreport.com
        www.bibleprophesy.org


        If you found this email useful, please Forward this email to your family and friends.

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        silverstockreport.com | 13241 Grass Valley Ave | Grass Valley | CA | 95945

        Monday, December 20, 2010

        Silver Stock Report: Secret Service: Protect the Currency!

        God Bless You!
         
        You may unsubscribe if you no longer wish to receive our emails.
         Greetings!

        Secret Service: Protect the Currency!

        (Please!)

        Silver Stock Report

        by Jason Hommel, December 20th, 2010


        Dear Secret Service, I read your web site, here:
        http://www.secretservice.gov/

        It's not yet illegal to cite a law, or government web site, right?

        I read your mission statement:
        http://www.secretservice.gov/mission.shtml

        "The mission of the United States Secret Service is to safeguard the nation's financial infrastructure and payment systems to preserve the integrity of the economy, and to protect national leaders, visiting heads of state and government, designated sites and National Special Security Events."

        I like those words, " safeguard the nation's financial infrastructure and payment systems to preserve the integrity of the economy ", and I'm sure many of my readers do too.

        I read your legal authorities and powers:
        http://www.secretservice.gov/faq.shtml#faq6

        I read you cited the code.  I looked up the code.

        TITLE 18 > PART II > CHAPTER 203 > § 3056
        § 3056. Powers, authorities, and duties of United States Secret Service

        http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/uscode18/usc_sec_18_00003056----000-.html

        I see that among your many responsibilities, you prosecute counterfeiters, that is to say, people who debase the currency by printing up their own currency. 

        Please do your job.  Why are you not prosecuting the biggest counterfeiters of all?  You know who we mean.   

        The Constitution authorizes the US government to go into debt, it does not authorize counterfeiting.  Does it?

        I see that among your many responsibilities, your job is to prosecute people who are engaged in identity theft. 

        Please do your job.  Over half the nation is asking, "Where is the Birth Certificate?"  You know who we mean.

        I see that among your many responsibilities, your job is to protect the Presidency.

        Please do your job.  If a man is not constitutionally qualified to hold that office, and if he illegally occupies that office, he would be destroying the office of the presidency, as all of his actions would be invalid if he is not constitutionally eligible to serve.  Thus, all of the people he has appointed to office also would not be holding those offices validly.  That would include the office of the US Attorney General, and the Secretary of Homeland Security, and Supreme Court Judges.  Thus it appears as if orders from certain appointees would also be invalid if they do not validly hold those offices.  So if certain bosses say, "No, you can't do that," then those words are meaningless, aren't they?

        I see that the people of the US, in most states, have personal authority to engage in what is called a "citizen's arrest" of people who have committed a felony in their presence.  It seems that is the least you could do, especially given you are specifically empowered, by law, to do exactly that.

        Please do your job.

        Prosecute the biggest counterfeiters in the nations's history.

        Prosecute the most notorious case of identity theft in the nation's history.

        Protect the office of the Presidency.

        Protect the currency.

        If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to pay me a personal visit.

        I can be found at the JH MINT, in Grass Valley, CA.  Our store hours are between 10AM and 5PM, Monday to Friday, closed on weekends, bank holidays, and closed from this Christmas Eve to New Years, from Dec. 24th, to Jan 3rd.

        I look forward to meeting at least some of you.  I'll be happy to show you my birth certificate, and show you my minting facilities to show you that I'm not counterfeiting US Silver Eagles or any other US coinage.

        Thank you.

        Sincerely,

        Jason Hommel
        www.jhmint.com

        =====

        I strongly advise you to take possession of real gold and silver, at anywhere near today's prices, while you still can.   The fundamentals indicate rising prices for decades to come, and a major price spike can happen at any time.

        Follow me on facebook!
        http://www.facebook.com/jason.hommel

        JH MINT & Coin Shop, Grass Valley, CA -- minimum order $5000 for free shipping, USA shipping only.
        Open 10AM to 5PM Pacific Time, Monday to Friday, closed weekends and bank holidays.  (Also Closed from Dec. 25th to Jan 1st)
        www.jhmint.com
        (530) 273-8175
        Kerri handles internet phone orders:
        kerri.jhmint@yaoo.com
        (530) 273-8822

        For smaller orders, or for shipping overseas, see my Mom's Silver Shop in Sacramento, CA
        www.momssilvershop.com
        3510 Auburn Blvd., #12  (Auburn & Watt Ave)
        Sacramento, CA
        (916) 481 5656



        Sincerely,

          Jason Hommel
          www.silverstockreport.com
          www.bibleprophesy.org


          If you found this email useful, please Forward this email to your family and friends.

          Safe Unsubscribe
          This email was sent to silverstockreport@gmail.com by j@silverstockreport.com.

          silverstockreport.com | 13241 Grass Valley Ave | Grass Valley | CA | 95945

          Wednesday, December 15, 2010

          Silver Stock Report: Silver News Explodes; JP Morgan Admits Guilt!

          God Bless You!
           
          You may unsubscribe if you no longer wish to receive our emails.

          Silver News Explodes; JP Morgan Admits Guilt!

          (JP Morgan admits they are short silver!)

          Silver Stock Report

          by Jason Hommel, December 15th, 2010


          JP Morgan admits guilt, admits being short silver, admits to wanting to buy back silver to cover their short positions, to appease guys like us on the internet!  This is astounding!

          It appears to me that the righteous are gutting the evil, and that only a few handful have the most powerful people in the world on the ropes, as if Bible Prophecy were being fulfilled here:

          Leviticus 26:8 NIV
          Five of you will chase a hundred, and a hundred of you will chase ten thousand, and your enemies will fall by the sword before you.

          But getting back to JP Morgan on the run, we've seen this kind of corporate behavior before.  It took years after the time that Barrick Gold first admitted they wanted to cover their short gold position, and until when they finally covered their gold shorts -- but they never really covered, they simply sold their short position back to the bankers like JP Morgan. 

          Similarly, it could be years, if not decades, for JP Morgan to unwind their silver shorts, and this is no exaggeration.  True, JP Morgan can cover by giving paper money settlements, or settle some via SLV shares, or close out positions by not buying silver, but if they do, their clients who wish to be long silver, will then likely start scrambling for physical silver, which should start to happen anyway, just on this news announcement. 

          The main points that many commentators and news journalists continue to ignore, is that the silver does not just trade on COMEX, it trades much more in London, "over the counter", where nobody can take delivery without paying a 17.5% Value Added Tax, which prevents nearly everyone from taking delivery!  What a scam!   No news commentators seem to acknowledge this VAT London silver tax yet.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_as_an_investment#Taxation

          The London LBMA market is a part of the BIS report from the Bank of International Settlements, which mentions a total notional value of "over the counter" "other precious metals" as $127 billion.  No major news outlet has even acknowledged or analyzed the BIS report yet.  It's right here.
          http://www.bis.org/statistics/otcder/dt21c22a.pdf

          We charge a mere 4 to 6.5% over spot: 4% over spot for US 90% silver coinage, and 6.5% over spot for 1 oz. newly manufactured rounds! 

          WE SELL SILVER FOR DELIVERY ABOUT 10% CHEAPER THAN JP MORGAN IN LONDON!  WHERE IS THE BILLIONS OF DOLLARS TRYING TO BUY SILVER FROM US? 

          AND WE SELL IT FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WITH NO EXTRA CHARGE TO ANYWHERE IN THE USA!

          One reason we can get silver cheaper is that we have .999 fine silver that might not ever have paid extra to be LBMA certified, but it's good silver, nevertheless.  To be LBMA certified can take years.  Many smaller refiners never bother, and if they can't sell their silver on the open market, they get 2% under spot from the wholesalers.  But instead, they are now making investment silver bars and coins that are ISO9000 certified, and so good, that you can put them into an IRA account.  We can tap into that silver stream, and save you money.

          If the market had any discernment, or ability to see through the lies, silver prices would exceed $50 to $100/oz. by the end of the day.  As it is, we may have to wait for the end of next year to see such prices, because it takes time to educate people when the media is filled with so much purposeful misinformation and lack of information.

          More importantly, people should be buying silver, not from bankrupt JP Morgan, not from bankrupt COMEX, but from JH MINT, at www.jhmint.com, our company that can deliver silver fast, in about 2-5 days, rather than the usual 2-5 months.  Furthermore, we can buy silver for you, cheaper, in bulk quantities from many major wholesalers, mints, and refineries.

          The premiums for "fund silver" is often 12% over spot when you buy CEF, or PSLV! 

          CEF NAV  http://www.centralfund.com/Nav%20Form.htm  PREMIUM OVER SPOT: 9.1%
          PSLV NAV  http://www.barchart.com/profile/etf/PSLV  PREMIUM OVER SPOT: 12.94/11.53 = 12.2%

          BUT, our premiums for real silver, SHIPPING AND INSURANCE INCLUDED, ARE LESS! SEE WWW.JHMINT.COM

          The whole original point of these funds was that they were supposed to be able to save you money on silver, by buying silver in bulk, but if they now cost more, then now's the time to cash them out, and buy real silver for less!

          =====

          More news!  Tomorrow, the CFTC was supposed to release new position limit levels for silver!

          CFTC admits will miss deadline on position limits
          http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1515374920101215

          =====

          Holy Smokes, Word is OUT!  Overseas!  GULF NEWS!  Excellent research here.  EXCELLENT ARTICLE!

          Reality of the great silver squeeze
          http://gulfnews.com/business/markets/reality-of-the-great-silver-squeeze-1.730074

          =-====

          The Financial Times acts as an unofficial mouthpiece for JP Morgan, leaking their desire to cover their shorts, hoping people will misinterpret this as if the already have covered their shorts, without quoting anyone at JP Morgan.

          Disgusting!  More manipulation of public opinion.

          http://www.gata.org/node/9419/print

          JPMorgan Cuts Back on U.S. Silver Futures
          By Jack Farchy and Gregory Meyer

          "The bank declined to comment on whether it had reduced its position in the silver market."  HA!  Misdirection!

          The FT times headline is NOT what the bank actually says!!!  And the headline has absolutely zero factual substantiation!

          If they can spin a "no comment" other people might spin this other ways, such as:

          JP Morgan, bleeding money in silver short position in a rising market, begs circling sharks to not bite!

          JP Morgan, caught with pants down around ankles, claims to not be flashing the neighborhood,

          JP Morgan, while trying to pick up the soap in the prison shower, begs fellow prison inmates to not take advantage.

          The Story makes Barrons, but they do no research.

          DECEMBER 14, 2010, 9:56 AM ET
          Report: J.P. Morgan Cutting Back Big Bets Against Silver
          http://blogs.barrons.com/focusonfunds/2010/12/14/report-jp-morgan-cutting-back-big-bets-against-silver/?mod=rss_BOLBlog

          The Story makes "Beacon Equity Research", and it's a great sum up.  They mention GATA and Ted Butler at the start, but they fail to mention the BIS report of "over the counter" "other precious metals" derivatives that have been as high as $203 billion.

          http://www.beaconequity.com/financial-times-jp-morgan-silver-manipulation-scheme-unwinds-2-2010-12-14/

          =====

          Market riggers are feeling the heat, so help GATA turn it up
          http://www.gata.org/node/9420

          =====

          Here's an interesting article on silver I can not let pass by.

          Sprott writes a silver report that reveals that ETF silver is not counted in the "demand" numbers for silver.
          http://www.industrymailout.com/Industry/View.aspx?id=245442&q=264546678qz%3D3f9465

          Fraudulent supply/demand numbers, omitting investor demand, or calling it a "surplus", is part of the manipulation of silver prices.

          Sprott, as good as they are, do not mention the BIS report.

          =====

          A few days ago, I mentioned Rob Kirby's article, which was posted in full, here: 
          Something's Wrong in the Silver Pit: But It's Much Bigger than J.P. Morgan
          http://news.silverseek.com/SilverSeek/1292004828.php

          Kirby does mention, and investigate the BIS report!!!

          I disagree with his main conclusion that the price ratio should be 3:1 silver to gold, based on the outstanding open interest, the price could do any number of things if people actually scramble for physical, and get out of these "bullion accounts" "over the counter" at LBMA member banks that cannot possibly have or store anywhere near $127 billion in silver, when the entire world mining industry produces so little, only $21 billion per year at 700 million oz. at $30/oz, and when only $3 billion in physical silver is actually being purchased annually for investment.

          =====

          Skeptics continue to ask us to "prove" that JP Morgan was short silver, despite that they have now admitted it.

          Hey, I was at the CFTC meeting, where the apologists said, several times, that the COMEX bank short positions were a hedge of "client long" positions.  At one point, Chairman Gensler asked what that meant, since it's obvious, that if the clients are long, then the firm is short, so they would be hedging a short with more shorts, which is the essence of market manipulation!  While they tried to avoid names, JP Morgan was fingered and proved to be the silver short with first hand evidence by Andrew McGuire at the hearings.  Or, in other words, there is no need to hedge client positions, since the clients want those positions!  You would only "hedge client positions" if the client positions would bankrupt the system if the banks had to deliver the silver that the clients want, so instead, they short silver, against their clients!

          Read my report on the CFTC hearings from back in late March, here:
          http://silverstockreport.com/2010/cftc-hearing.html

          What other proof?
          1.  Bear Stearns had a silver short position and was acquired by JP Morgan.
          2.  25 lawsuits against JP Morgan for manipulating the silver market.
          3.  Admission by Bart Chilton of the CFTC that one entity controlled 40% of the silver at COMEX.
          4.  Admission by the Justice Department that they were investigating JP Morgan for silver manipulation, published by the NY POST.

          Deniers are those who are ignorant, lack research skills, or who choose to lie to people.  JP Morgan can pay many people to lie.

          =====

          So, here is a skeptic, denier, fool, paid disinformation agent, who knows.  Regardless, he needs to be answered.

          I refute 8 major points in an article from Mike "mish" Shedlock at my facebook page.
          http://www.facebook.com/jason.hommel

          Jason Hommel Most Prolific Idiot of the day on silver: Mike Mish Shedlock. So many errors, so little time.

          The Silver Conspiracy From JPMorgan Makes No Sense And They Could Actually Be Making Money

          Really Mike?  Well, you asked, so don't get mad at the answers. 

          1. Where is the proof JP Morgan was short silver? 25 lawsuits against them, based on Bear Stearns' positions which they acquired, and the BIS reports showing up to $203 billion in OTC other precious metals notional derivatives values. 

          2. Could JP Morgan hedge by buying the SLV? Well, the SLV has, like, what 350 million oz.? But JP Morgan might be short by up to 3.3 billion oz. That's not really enough to hedge; that's the main point.

          3. Why didn't JP Morgan blow up long ago on silver shorts? JP Morgan has $2 trillion in capital, that's $2000 billion. Shorting 3.3 billion oz. at $5/oz. up to $30 is a loss of $25 x 3.3, which is a paltry $82.5 billion so far, most of which would not need to be paid, if OTC holders in bullion accounts never demand delivery, which they don't, because London has a 17% VAT on silver, making delivery very rare.

          4. Where is the conspiracy? Well, how about the CFTC looking the other way for years, and denying everything that was just admitted today by JP Morgan themselves? If JP Morgan is shorting for the Fed to maintain the dollar, this is a big conspiracy to prop up the currency of the dollar.

          5. No logical reason to be short? Um, propping up the bad currency is a big important thing to do, somebody has to do it.

          6. Opportunity to gain? Who else can JP Morgan buy silver from, to cover up to 3.3 billion oz, when the world mines 700 million oz. in a year? Nobody has that much silver. Nobody else is selling; that's the problem of a concentrated position, there is nobody else to trade with to unwind the trade; they were the primary sellers.

          7. Everyone should be happy with a low silver price? Silver is money, it's savings. Many investors have died waiting for silver to rise, and they never benefited, and lived in poverty while waiting, and were essentially defrauded here by this. Low prices are not good for miners, either, who produce essential things for the world like zinc, copper, lead, and gold, as byproducts of silver.

          8. Sillyness to suppress markets for decades? Read the Bible, these things go on for 40 to 80 years at times. This time, it has lasted since 1913, and it's not over yet.

          My God, was Mish That wrong about that many things? Can't be by accident, I think, but you never know.

          =====

          Someone named Kid Dynamite tried to refute my estimate that JP Morgan is short by 3.3 billion oz., but he had to retract his statement that such a position was impossible, and the discussion revealed new evidence that JP Morgan could be short by as much as 6.6 billion oz., or $100 billion at $15/oz., which could be $200 billion today.  The reason is that the BIS report that nobody mentions, used to say the total notional value in derivatives for "over the counter" other precious metals, as of June, 2009, was $203 billion, but this number was revised to $93 billion sometime after I wrote to the US Justice Department about JP Morgan's silver position back in April, 2010, here, where you can see the original number in my archives.  http://silverstockreport.com/2010/doj.html

          In the discussion, I remembered that JP Morgan has permission from the US government to not disclose anything in their financial statements that might threaten national security, and this directly threatens the value of the US dollar, or Federal Reserve Note.  Thus, JP Morgan likely revised statements given to the BIS in light of the heat turning up on their silver short position.

          The discussion on Kid's blog was the most popular article at seekingalpha for a few days.  I posted about 8-10 times at his blog.

          JP Morgan and the Massive Silver Short: The Greatest Story Ever Told
          http://seekingalpha.com/article/241152-jp-morgan-and-the-massive-silver-short-the-greatest-story-ever-told#comment-1348412

          =====

          Speaking of evidence and proof for the skeptics, I just remembered that the NY Post posted the emails from Andrew McGuire, where he outlined to the CFTC the manipulation, IN ADVANCE!
          http://www.gata.org/node/8529

          The NY POST then investigated, and discovered that two arms of the Federal Government were investigating JP Morgan's silver short position, and this was back in May, 2010!!!!

          NY POST
          Feds probing JPMorgan trades in silver pit
          By MICHAEL GRAY
          Last Updated: 10:42 AM, May 16, 2010
          http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/feds_probing_jpmorgan_trades_in_gZzMvWBqOJpB55M7Rh9vwM

          =====

          www.OneOverSpot.com is listing more and more silver and gold for sale. If we begin to run out, we may start listing our bullion for sale on their platform!
           
          =====

          Follow Max Keiser's latest on "Crash JP Morgan, Buy Silver"!
          http://maxkeiser.com/

          =====

          I strongly advise you to take possession of real gold and silver, at anywhere near today's prices, while you still can.   The fundamentals indicate rising prices for decades to come, and a major price spike can happen at any time.

          Become my friend on facebook!
          http://www.facebook.com/jason.hommel

          JH MINT & Coin Shop, Grass Valley, CA -- minimum order $5000 for free shipping, USA shipping only.
          Open 10AM to 5PM Pacific Time, Monday to Friday, closed weekends and bank holidays.  (Also Closed from Dec. 25th to Jan 1st)
          www.jhmint.com
          (530) 273-8175
          Kerri handles internet phone orders:
          kerri.jhmint@yaoo.com
          (530) 273-8822

          For smaller orders, or for shipping overseas, see my Mom's Silver Shop in Sacramento, CA
          www.momssilvershop.com
          3510 Auburn Blvd., #12  (Auburn & Watt Ave)
          Sacramento, CA
          (916) 481 5656



          Sincerely,

            Jason Hommel
            www.silverstockreport.com
            www.bibleprophesy.org


            If you found this email useful, please Forward this email to your family and friends.

            Safe Unsubscribe
            This email was sent to silverstockreport@gmail.com by j@silverstockreport.com.

            silverstockreport.com | 13241 Grass Valley Ave | Grass Valley | CA | 95945